A number of residents at recent meetings have called for the Board of Education to allow the town to buy the land, but board members have maintained a silence.

The property, which borders the Clifton Park-Halfmoon Public Library, was bought by the school district in 1970, when planning was underway for the Shaketon Elementary School. The district now considers the land surplus.

Earlier this year the district went through a bidding process and received just one bid — from DCG Development, the downtown area’s major commercial developer. DCG offered $1.7 million, but later withdrew its offer, causing the school district to seek a new round of bids.

[Residents fight for future of Clifton Park wild space]

Robinson said the Board of Education reviewed the bids in executive session Nov. 8 and will do so again this Tuesday, with the goal of making a decision at its Dec. 6 meeting.

“The board is really, really looking to exercise due diligence in considering all the bids and the public sentiment, but also the larger impact on the school district,” Robinson said.

While there’s uncertainty about whether the Clifton Park grant will be successful, the other two proposals approved by supervisors are considered a sure thing.

In Wilton, the county will be paying $32,144 in transaction costs as landowner John Tooker donates development rights worth $1 million to Saratoga PLAN, the land preservation organization.

The 95 acres is along Old Gick and Jones roads in Wilton, in an area surrounded by development. The land is currently rented to grow alfalfa by Kings Ransom Farm of Northumberland, one of the county’s largest dairy farms.

In Galway, landowners Harold and Arlene Rhodes are giving up the development rights to 23 acres of woodland that adjoin the existing Milton Preserve and the Carpenter Farm. The county has agreed to pay $23,405 in transaction costs, though Saratoga PLAN will raise the money to buy the easement and then hold it. PLAN will pay more than $28,000 in transaction costs.

The three grants together total $105,549, meaning the county will spend less than half of the $250,000 it allocated this year for open space protection. In most years, demand outstrips the available funding.

Despite receiving only the three applications, the supervisors tentatively plan to include another $250,000 for open space protection in next year’s county budget.